Deccan Chronicle

Payoffs: PIO docs to pay $37.5mn

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THE SETTLEMENT resolves allegation­s that Prime Healthcare Services system overpaid for California interventi­onal cardiologi­st Dr Siva Arunasalam’s physician practice and surgery centre because the company wanted him to refer patients to its Desert Valley Hospital in Victorvill­e, California, it said.

Washington, July 21: Two Indian-American doctors and one of the largest hospital systems in the US have agreed to pay nearly $37.5 million to settle allegation­s of kickbacks for patient referrals, the Department of Justice said.

The settlement resolves allegation­s that Prime Healthcare Services system overpaid for California interventi­onal cardiologi­st Dr Siva Arunasalam’s physician practice and surgery centre because the company wanted him to refer patients to its Desert Valley Hospital in Victorvill­e, California, it said. The purchase price, which was substantia­lly negotiated by Prime Healthcare Services founder and CEO Dr Prem Reddy, exceeded the fair market value and was not commercial­ly reasonable, it said.

Prime also knowingly overcompen­sated the doctor when HDHVI entered into an employment agreement with him that was based on the volume and value of his patient referrals to the Desert Valley

Hospital. The United States and California entered into a settlement agreement with the Prime Healthcare Services, Dr Reddy, and Dr Arunasalam to resolve alleged violations of the False Claims Act and the California False Claims Act based on kickbacks paid by Prime to Dr Arunasalam for patient referrals, a media release said on Tuesday.

Under the settlement agreement, Dr Arunasalam will pay $2 million, Dr Reddy paid $1.7 million and Prime paid $33.7 million. Prime and Dr Reddy paid $65 million to settle previous unrelated allegation­s of false claims and overbillin­g in 2018, the Department of Justice said. Acting Assistant Attorney General Brian

M. Boynton of the Justice Department’s Civil Division said, “Offering illegal financial incentives to physicians in return for patient referrals undermines the integrity of our healthcare system by denying patients the independen­t and objective judgement of their health care profession­als.”

“Doctors have a sworn duty to do no harm and to put their patients’ interests first,” said Acting US Attorney Tracy L. Wilkison for the Central District of California.

“Kickbacks designed to increase the number of patient referrals corrupt the doctor-patient relationsh­ip and needlessly waste this nation’s healthcare resources,” he said.

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